The following report is from a local resident regarding the latest "South Copeland Community Partnership" shindig "The Film Talks: Exploring GDF events aim to create an opportunity for people to hear different perspectives on what the scheme could mean for the area as well as being able to ask questions".
"Points from the latest meeting at Beggars Theatre (Millom).
The seismic results were not available and will not be until the end of January.
It had always been portrayed that it would be approximately 20 years as a construction site. Following that, either rail or road transportation of the radioactive waste directly into the dump. This is not the case with the developer explaining that the site would be a construction site for the expected 150 life of the dump. The first tunnels would take approximately 20 years before waste could be accepted but tunnelling would continue. This means the movement of spoil (material dug out) will continue for the dump lifetime.
The storage of nuclear waste would occur on site as it is transferred from rail or road transport prior to transference into the dump as numerous containers of waste will need to be transferred daily.
The dump developer explained that spoil material removed from the dump will not be used as backfill as we have been led to believe and bentonite used instead. This poses the huge question of where the spoil is dumped a very rough estimation of the equivalent of 500,000 lorry loads and the question of transport movements to bring in the bentonite.
The developer was unable to clarify if the figures given to Cumbria Council by the developer of initially 800 jobs on site reducing to 600 once nuclear waste begins to be accepted then down to 200 then obviously 0 are still valid.
Borehole testing to test the geology of the rock under the sea off our coast will not occur until 2029/30
The site will be a secured site.
The site will be larger than the 1km squared site often quoted especially during the first 20 years of construction.
An independent social anthropologist (CoRWM) stated we could withdraw from the process at anytime via the Community Partnership she was corrected by John Sutton of Sustainable Duddon a member of the partnership who informed her that only the developer or Cumberland Council can remove us from the process."
Tim Kendall
Nuclear Waste Services are currently looking at the wildlife of the Drigg and Sellafield area in their 'search' for a deep hot nuclear dump and guess what - it is ALREADY depleted thanks to the nuclear industry's cumulative blight over the last several decades. The industry/government will of course aim to use this depletion as justification for siting a nuclear dump on the West Coast of Cumbria - 'hey there is nothing outstanding wildlife wise so all good' In fact what is left is all the more precious!
The following is from Radiation Free Lakeland December 2015..
Imagine you are stood on sand dunes between the mountains and the sea. Above your head a sky full of thousands of elegant wheeling birds from terns to black headed gulls. “The birds, which at a distance cover the ground like white dots, rise in a mass into the air. It is difficult to tread between the nests..” This is a description from The Spectator written in 1902.
The writer continues: “The nesting colonies of sea birds are commonly stinking places ; but here the pure dry sand disinfected the guano, and absorbed any scraps of wasted food. As you walked across the links towards the place where they descended at a steep angle to the shore, fresh birds always rose as sand-ridge after sand-ridge was crossed. ..Such a place affords a delightful spectacle to a naturalist. The grey sea, the long row of yellow sand hills, the distant Cumbrian Mountains, the deafening, shrill music from the clouds of birds, make you feel like a traveller landing upon some unexplored island.” The Ravenglass Gullery stretched along miles of sand dunes to Drigg and was even thought to have provided eggs for the Roman Fort at Ravenglass. Up until 1958 thousands of black headed gulls eggs from the gullery were harvested at a time in basketfuls and sold in London. The black headed gull is now on the amber list.
Collapse
By 1983 there was a huge decline in numbers of waterfowl, waders and gulls in the Ravenglass estuary. This decline was most apparent in the black headed gull population nesting on the Drigg dunes. The gullery failed catastrophically going from over 10,000 pairs in 1976 to the site being abandoned in 1984. The finger of suspicion fell on radioactive waste discharges from Sellafield: “Since 1983, concern has been expressed about the apparent decline in numbers of birds in the Ravenglass estuary in west Cumbria, particularly of the black-headed gull colony on the Drigg dunes, and suggestions have been made that this decline might be due to excessive radiation in the birds’ food and their general environment.” But official studies concluded: “the concentrations of radionuclides in the foods, body tissues and general environment were at least three orders of magnitude too low to have had any effect. The more likely cause of the desertion of the gullery was the combination of an uncontrolled fox population, the severest outbreak of myxomatosis amongst the rabbits since 1954 and the driest May–July period on record, all in the same year (1984)”.
Fantastic Mr Fox?
So, the official finger of blame for the gullery collapse was pointed not at the dumping of nuclear wastes but at a lack of rabbits and the Fantastic Mr Fox! If this was the cause surely the gullery (there long before the rabbits), would have recovered along with the rabbit population. Earlier this month it was announced that the “Repository” for “Low Level Nuclear Waste” at Drigg has been given the all clear by the Environment Agency to expand, though this still needs to be approved by Cumbria County Council scheduled for early 2016 (date tbc). http://llwrsite.com/2015/11/llwr-achieves-major-milestone/ The Alvin Weinberg Foundation welcomes the Environment Agency’s rubber stamp with open arms saying “Radioactive waste, such as that found at Drigg, is surprisingly easy to contain, as encasing the waste in appropriate materials can block all the effects of radiation.” A “repository” suggests “a safe storage location.” Drigg is not a contained store. Radioactive emissions are routinely released to air and to sea. (http://llwrsite.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/7_-RP-DR-GEN-PROJ-00035-2010-Leachate-Groundwater-and-Surface-Water-Monitoring-Issue-2-MASTER-26-.pdf )
Some years ago an advert appeared in the Whitehaven News asking Cumbrians if they could recall what had been put in Drigg nuclear dump as the official records were less than complete. “We are very keen to speak to people who were directly involved in consigning nuclear waste during the 1960s to the mid-1980s in order to build up a comprehensive picture of the waste inventory in the trenches.”
It is not surprising that the deadly cocktail of radioactive and chemical waste at Drigg is unfathomable. Drigg was first dragooned into military service in 1940 with Sellafield following two years later as Royal Ordnance Factories producing trinitrotoluene (TNT) and other chemical explosives. These isolated and remote coastal sites within a short distance of each other were chosen because of the hazardous nature of the process and to minimise the risk of enemy air attack.
Things have moved on from tumble tipping into trenches. Now radioactive and chemical waste is packed into shipping containers which are then filled with concrete.
Nuclear “Bin Juice”
At Drigg a Marine Holding Tank operates like a septic tank and the nuclear dump “bin juice” is emptied into the Irish Sea regularly. Incredibly the radioactive sediment which collects on the floor of Drigg’s Marine Holding Tank was recently trucked over 250 miles to Kings Cliffe, Northamptonshire.( http://llwrsite.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/On-the-Level-June-2015.pdf )The people of Kings Cliffe have vigorously opposed the opening up of landfill for reclassified/deregulated “Very Low Level Radioactive Waste” Northamptonshire County Council had refused planning permission for the Kings Cliffe nuclear dump and 98 per cent of people who took part in local referendums opposed the plans. However, government minister Eric Pickles dumped democracy in order to dump nuclear waste. Mr Pickles said he was satisfied the waste “would not be harmful to the local community”. Tell that to the gulls!
Getting Shot of Nuclear Wastes
The nuclear industry is desperate to get shot of its nuclear wastes. Radioactive waste is dispersed around the environment by diverting it to landfill, discharging it into our estuaries, seas and atmosphere using for example metal ‘recycling’ plants and incinerators. As a result of this deregulation, intermediate level waste has already been “accidently” dumped in Cumbrian landfill at Lillyhall. The plan for the extension of Drigg Nuclear Dump will come before Cumbria County Council in early 2016. We will be urging the Council to question the assumption that Drigg’s vulnerable and uniquely dangerous coastal nuclear dump site should recieve further nuclear wastes. The Author of ‘Wild Britain’ observes: “The full title of this nature reserve – Ravenglass Dunes and Gullery – is now a sad irony, for although the dunes are still a distinguishing feature, the gullery is not. In 1985 the birds decided that the level of radioactive pollution from nearby Sellafield had reached unacceptable levels, and the huge colony of black-headed gull and the four species of breeding tern – sandwich, common, arctic and little – all departed.”
Wild Britain, Douglas Botting, (1992), p.87/8. http://www.doordie.org.uk/issues/issue-9/22-9-reviews/117-wild-britain-a-traveller-s-guide.html
New build and continued reprocessing would of course lead to a further tsunami of nuclear wastes requiring many more Driggs. https://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/stop-moorside-biggest-nuclear-development-in-europe
Please write to Cumbria County Council at : democratic.services@cumbria.gov.uk asking them to oppose the extension to Drigg and to oppose the continued dumping of radioactive wastes at this uniquely vulnerable site. “Low Level Waste” does not mean low risk or short lived. Some of these “low level” radioactive wastes will still be lethal tens of thousands of years into the future. http://ieer.org/resource/books/high-level-dollars-low-level-sense/
Planning Application 4/11/9007 Low Level Waste Repository Site Optimisation and Closure Works
“The Environment Agency has given a formal view that providing their requirements as stated in the Agency guidance are met, the potential for disruption of the site is an acceptable risk” By “disruption of the site” they mean inundation by sea and flood.
“Planning Overview
LLW Repository Ltd is seeking planning permission from Cumbria County Council (CCC) for:
Disposal of low level waste (LLW) in Vault 9 (rather than storage);
The phased construction of new Vaults 9a and 10 to 14;
The phased disposal of LLW in the vaults over the period 2014-2079; and
Phased construction of a final restoration cap over the period 2014 to 2079 across each full vault and the adjacent area of trenches. The site will be progressively restored to grassland in parallel with a phased cap construction with screening planting on the perimeter of the site.”
“The Drigg site uses two disposal systems: 1) An original system operated from 1959 to 1988 comprising a series of parallel trenches excavated into glacial clays, back filled with LLW and covered with an interim water resistant cap. 2) Current disposal of compacted waste placed in steel ISO-freight containers, with void space filled with a highly fluid cement based grout. These containers are then disposed of in a series of open concrete vaults. Figure 1 illustrates the disposition of the two disposal systems. Drigg LLW contains a large proportion of cellulosic waste together with disposed steel and contaminated soil. Radionuclides with highest activities in the inventory include 3H, 241Pu, 137Cs, 234U and 90Sr. The long-lived radionuclides 238U and 232Th have the highest molal concentration.” http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/16608/1/mrspaper.pdf
It does not matter how much evidence is produced proving the past unacceptable damage done to this area and wildlife in particular by the nuclera industry. Still today's intended perpetrators will just ignore it. They will continue to doggedly implement their plans. They are paid handsomely to pretend they are being responsible by having surveys and consultations. Their forefathers maybe just maybe acted out of ignorance. That cannot be the case any longer, scientific information is available, and the public are more savvy and will not be fooled by the people paid to try and convince us their plans are safe and they have the expertise, so we can trust them. However there are the fools that can't or won…